The story behind the art

“Well Rounded”

and other circle installations

The story behind the art

Every emotion is valuable and ok to feel, it’s what makes us well rounded.

Throughout my life, I drew images of my inner world, however, those drawings were private and I had not ever considered myself to be an artist.

Private Journal Drawing “My Protector” 1998

In 2011, I moved to Boise, Idaho. I had just become a Registered Nurse, had left and abusive relationship. I was also struggling to overcome a 25 year long eating disorder. After 3 hospitalizations and countless hours of therapy, I was equipped with a tool box of coping skills, ready to be used, however, I was still unsure of where I belonged in the world. The struggle to overcome an addiction and become who I was meant to be, was still unclear.

Within a month of being in Boise, my mom came to visit me. She brought her paints and brushes and one evening when we sat down together, she introduced me to the way paint and materials move across canvas. That was all it took, I was hooked. I began to paint daily. I did so without intent, only connected to the process and the release and calmness that painting brought to my inner world. Painting became a way to get pain and sadness, hurt and shame out of me. Sometimes I cried into the paint, sometimes I got angry and pushed paint around with my fingers and other times I meticulously controlled the design with stencils and brushes. Over the next 3 years, through painting, I slowly moved my way out of an eating disorder and into the artist woman I was always meant to be. The more I painted, the less I was engaged in harmful behavior. I painted over 300 paintings all full of colors and materials and then I put them aside.

Paintings where I played with paint, dripping it, smearing it, just to see what it could do.

This last year, 2018, I received a grant to turn my life story into a virtual reality experience to address eating disorders. I needed to compile my life story so I began to re visit my past. I re experienced many wounds, but this time I had the coping skill of painting. As I dove deeper into the life I lived; abuse, addiction, my fathers suicide, I was triggered. Even though many were wounds I had processed so deeply with a therapist in the past, I felt grief for a life that was so difficult at times. In order to write my story I had to feel it again and at times I cried again, got angry again but I did not go back to my eating disorder, instead I went back to all those paintings.

It was an evening when I was just sitting in my art studio, looking around at all the paints and paintings that now surrounded me in this new life of mine led by recovery. I felt a deep appreciation for my journey. As I sat there reflecting on my surroundings, so different from the past, I took a deeper look at all the paintings I had done when struggling for recovery. One by one I pulled them out of the box and marveled at the patterns and colors I had created. Some were on paper, some on canvas, but as I sat there holding these single unit paintings, I felt this urge in me to cut them up. I wanted to change their shape, manipulate them into a different structure, much like I had done with my life. I wanted to see them in a new form. I had no plan for what I would do with the newly cut shapes, I just knew that I needed to reshape them, into circles. Circles represent boundaries and safety. The circle is a unified beginning and ending.

cutting the circles showed me intimate details and designs I did not see when they were in a whole form on stretched canvas. Each one was unique and beautiful to me.

I began to cut. I traced circles, I cut circles and I repeated this nightly. Over the next 3 months I cut feverishly over 2000 circles. In the day, I would work to re write my life story, visiting old journals, therapy notes, letters from my parents and in the evenings I would trace and cut circles. There was something about the process, the manipulation of materials in my hands that was calming and brought a closure to a day of revisiting my life past. At times I would stack the circles up according to their color and I would marvel at how they looked, like circular towers, each one unique, unable to be replicated the next time I stacked them up. Like revisiting my past, each time I looked back, the story never repeated the same way, maybe a new memory came up or a different perspective, always unable to stack the memories exactly the same each time.

Stacking them up into color categories was difficult at times because some circles had so many different colors on them.

Once the circles were all cut, I then began to hand punch holes into each one and then I pushed grommets into each hole. I cut and grommeted over 4000 holes and though my hands ached at times, I did not want to stop. The process of taking something that was once only a means to get pain and sadness, hurt and shame out of me was now turning into something beautiful, connected, and larger than I. I loved the act of directing the outcome, first the shape and then the pattern of placing each circle together. I spent weeks organizing and re organizing the patterns of colors the circles made when I moved them around over and over.

Trying out different designs.

The next step was to bring the cut pieces back together in a new form. I had a vision of linking them to create a curtain, something that had two sides, but each side different. The colors were a representation of all the work I did to find me, and the black side a memory of all my shame and sadness I had held onto for so long.

Once I found a pattern that spoke to me, I then linked each circle together with jump rings and slowly all the paintings I did so long ago, in their new form, all touching, was becoming a single complete unit. It was as if each painting was a snapshot of the past, each one a like a different emotion coming together. As I linked them I thought deeply about the universal struggle to accept the self and the similar struggle that so many have. I had so many years thinking I shouldn’t feel a certain way, I shouldn’t be a certain way, that I always had to try and change who I was. I thought about how so many people struggle much the same. I began to see myself as just one of the circles and all the ones around me representing so many people on the same journey.

Even when we feel like we are alone, we are not. There is always someone out there who can see their story in yours. Each installation reflects all the emotions; anger, fear, pain, joy, passion, love, shame, guilt all coming together beautifully.